70sFan wrote:G35 wrote:70sFan wrote:I already bring up scoring numbers for 11 years primes and they look identical. Let's take 3 years peaks:
In regular season:
1993-95 Olajuwon: 25.8 points per75 on 56.8 TS% (+3.2 rTS%)
2001-03 Duncan: 23.9 points per75 on 55.9 TS% (+4.0 rTS%)
In postseason:
1993-95 Olajuwon: 27.6 points per75 on 56.4 TS% (+2.8 rTS%)
2001-03 Duncan: 24.2 points per75 on 55.8 TS% (+3.9 rTS%)
Hakeem has slight edge in volume, Duncan was slightly more efficient. As I said, you can give Olajuwon slight edge for his additional volume, but they are within the same tier. I think you are confused by Olajuwon's aestically pleasing game, he wasn't GOAT-level scorer. He was very good isolation scorer who relied on very tough shots and wasn't great at creating easier ones.
As far as passing goes, I didn't say that Hakeem was bad passer, but he wasn't good for a high volume superstar. You talk about getting the ball to shooters, but Hakeem missed a lot of openings in his best years. He was frequently doubled and he usually saw only the most obvious reads, he didn't have the ability to manipulate defenses, he wasn't good at finding cutters either. I will share my collection of Hakeem clips at some point in some form, I don't have enough time for that noe unfortunately.
Duncan around 2002 became very good passer. Not elite one like Jokic of course, but his awareness of double teams was on another level compared to Olajuwon. He was also more versatile passer, as he could find cutters from the high post and even play two-man game with old Robinson. Hakeem's passing outside the post wasn't much of a factor, outside of occasional outlet pass (Duncan was better at that as well) or rare inside pass from drive.
It's fine to pick Hakeem, but they were comparable offensive players.
Over three points a game difference over three years is a massive gap.
If you look at all time PPG leaders in the playoff and the 25.0 PPG is Dirk/Kobe Bryant while 22.0 PPG is Tracy McGrady/Demar Derozan.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/pts_per_g_career_p.html
No, I showed you the list of the leaders in PPG in the playoffs.
Hakeem's career PPG in the playoffs is 25.90
Duncan's career PPG in the playoffs is 20.61
That is over a 5 PPG difference. Hakeem is a significantly greater volume scorer over his playoff career vs Duncan.
I also would say peak Olajuwon is the 1994 and 1995 playoffs. I would say you pick any two years you want from Duncan's career and Hakeem is clearly ahead.
Then if we just want to cherry pick seasons, Hakeem had a GOAT type series in 1987-88 vs the Mavericks.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1988-nba-western-conference-first-round-rockets-vs-mavericks.html
PPG - 37.5
REB - 16.8
FG% - .571
FT% - .881
TS% - .641
ORTG - 134
Those are NBA2K numbers and Tim does not have that sort of scoring mentality to maintain that sort of average over a series. That's not how he plays. And in the playoffs, I will take a dip in efficiency, with a bump in volume. Defenses are going to be better and points are at a premium. Efficiency is not the messiah in the playoffs that some like to make it seem. Efficiency is nice, scoring is better. And one of Tim's weaknesses in the playoffs is FT shooting, Hakeem is better in this area.....